14.1 OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS CHAPTER 14. ETHICAL & SOCIAL IMPACT.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems
Advertisements

15.1 © 2002 by Prentice Hall c h a p t e r 15 ETHICAL & SOCIAL IMPACT OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS.
Social, Ethical, & Legal Issues in ISs
Information Technology in Organizations
ETHICAL AND SOCIAL ISSUES IN INFORMATION SYSTEMS
Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems
5 Lecture Ethical and Social Issues in Enterprise.
Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems
5.1 © 2006 by Prentice Hall Ethical and Social Issues in the Digital Firm.
5.1 © 2006 by Prentice Hall 5 Chapter Ethical and Social Issues in the Digital Firm.
1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2004, The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Ethical Challenges Ethics Principles of right and wrong that.
4.1 © 2007 by Prentice Hall 4 Chapter Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems.
Ethical and Social Issues. Ethics Principles of right and wrong used by individuals as free moral agents to guide behavior.
Chapter Five Ethical and Social Impact of Information Systems.
1 SESSION 5 ETHICAL AND SOCIAL ISSUES IN THE DIGITAL FIRM.
ITIS 1210 Introduction to Web-Based Information Systems Ethical & Social Issues.
Ethics and Privacy. Utilitarian approach: an ethical action is the one that provides the most good or does the least harm. Rights approach: ethical action.
5.1 © 2004 by Prentice Hall Management Information Systems 8/e Chapter 5 Ethical and Social Issues in the Digital Firm 5 5 ETHICAL AND SOCIAL ISSUES IN.
5.1. LEARNING OBJECTIVES UNDERSTAND ETHICAL, SOCIAL, POLITICAL ISSUES RAISED BY INFORMATION SYSTEMSUNDERSTAND ETHICAL, SOCIAL, POLITICAL ISSUES RAISED.
Ethical and Social Issues in the Digital Firm
. 4.1 Understanding ethical and social issues related to systems. 4.2 Ethics in an information society. 4.3 The moral dimensions of information systems.
4.1 © 2007 by Prentice Hall 4 Chapter Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems.
Chapter 4. Understanding Social and Ethical Issues Related to Systems  In the past firms paid for the legal defense of their employees enmeshed in civil.
MIS 2000 Chapter 4 Social, Legal and Ethical Issues.
Ethical and Social Issues IT Company / Technical Org Ethical and Social Issues IT Company / Technical Org.
12.1 © 2007 by Prentice Hall 12 Chapter Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems.
12.1 © 2007 by Prentice Hall 12 Chapter Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems.
C4- Social, Legal, and Ethical Issues in the Digital Firm
ETHICAL AND SOCIAL ISSUES IN THE DIGITAL FIRM Chapter.
5.1 Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. Management Information Systems, Second Canadian Edition Chapter 5: Social, Legal, and Ethical Issues.
Introduction to Computer Science
5.1 © 2003 by Prentice Hall 5 5 ETHICAL AND SOCIAL ISSUES IN THE DIGITAL FIRM Chapter.
Technology in Focus: Information Technology Ethics
Ethics Last Update Copyright Kenneth M. Chipps Ph.D
5.1 © 2004 by Prentice Hall ETHICAL, SOCIAL AND POLITICAL ISSUES IN THE DIGITAL FIRM.
Who wants to be an IT Ethics Millionaire. Rules of Play You will get between 30 seconds and 2 minutes to formulate your answer You can opt out at any.
1 ETHICAL ISSUES INTRODUCTION to E-COMMERCE (COMM1Q) Ethical Issues: source; Laudon & Laudon, Management Information Systems 7th Edn., Prentice-Hall, 1998.
4.1 © 2007 by Prentice Hall 4 Chapter Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems.
5.1 Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc. Management Information Systems, Second Canadian Edition Chapter 5: Social, Legal, and Ethical Issues.
Copyright Prentice-Hall, Inc Computers in Society: Today Chapter 10.
LEARNING OBJECTIVES TO UNDERSTAND THE RELATIONSHIP OF ETHICS TO MANAGEMENT IN THE INFORMATION SOCIETY TO APPRECIATE THE MORAL DIMENSIONS INVOVED & THE.
Ethical and Social Impact of Information Systems
MIS 2000 Ethical and Legal Aspects of Information Systems Updated: June 2015.
Ethics.
Lecture 8 ETHICAL AND SOCIAL ISSUES IN INFORMATION SYSTEMS (continued) © Prentice Hall
MIS 2000 Social Implications of IST. Outline Law & Ethics Accountability and Liability Information Rights Privacy Computer Abuse and Crime Intellectual.
ETHICAL AND SOCIAL IMPACT OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS
Ethics and Privacy. 3.1 Ethical Issues 3.2 Privacy.
3.1 © 2010 by Prentice Hall Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems Chapter 4.
4/17: Ethical & Social Issues in IS
Lecture 7 ETHICAL AND SOCIAL ISSUES IN INFORMATION SYSTEMS 1.
CHAPTER 5 ETHICS & PRIVACY.
Information Systems Week 4 Ethical & Social Issues in IS.
Security and Ethics Safeguards and Codes of Conduct.
? Moral principles of right and wrong Used by individuals/organisations To guide behaviour.
Lecture 9 ETHICAL AND SOCIAL ISSUES IN INFORMATION SYSTEMS (continued) © Prentice Hall
1 Lecture 7 ETHICAL AND SOCIAL ISSUES IN THE DIGITAL FIRM PRESENTED BY: WALTER O Angol.
4.1 © 2010 by Prentice Hall 6 Chapter Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems.
4-1 Copyright © 2013 Pearson Canada Inc. CHAPTER FOUR Social, Ethical, and Legal Issues in Information Systems.
4.1 Copyright © 2014 Pearson Education, Inc. Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems Chapter 4 Video cases: Case 1: “What Net Neutrality Means.
Ethical and Social Issues in the Digital Firm
Ethical and Social Issues in the Digital Firm
ETHICAL & SOCIAL IMPACT OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS
ETHICAL AND SOCIAL ISSUES IN THE DIGITAL FIRM
Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems
Week 4 Ethical & Social Issues in IS
Ethical and Social Issues in Information Systems
ETHICAL ISSUES IN INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY (CCI410) PERTEMUAN 7
How ethical, social, and political issues are connected?
Ethical, Social and Political Issues
Presentation transcript:

14.1 OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS CHAPTER 14. ETHICAL & SOCIAL IMPACT

14.2 LEARNING OBJECTIVES ANALYZE ETHICAL, SOCIAL, POLITICAL ISSUES RAISED BY INFORMATION SYSTEMSANALYZE ETHICAL, SOCIAL, POLITICAL ISSUES RAISED BY INFORMATION SYSTEMS IDENTIFY, APPLY MORAL DIMENSIONS OF INFORMATION SOCIETYIDENTIFY, APPLY MORAL DIMENSIONS OF INFORMATION SOCIETY*

14.3 LEARNING OBJECTIVES APPLY ETHICAL ANALYSISAPPLY ETHICAL ANALYSIS UNDERSTAND ETHICAL PRINCIPLES FOR CONDUCTUNDERSTAND ETHICAL PRINCIPLES FOR CONDUCT DEVELOP CORPORATE POLICIES FOR ETHICAL CONDUCTDEVELOP CORPORATE POLICIES FOR ETHICAL CONDUCT*

14.4 MANAGEMENT CHALLENGES UNDERSTAND ETHICAL & SOCIAL ISSUES RELATED TO SYSTEMSUNDERSTAND ETHICAL & SOCIAL ISSUES RELATED TO SYSTEMS ETHICS IN AN INFORMATION SOCIETYETHICS IN AN INFORMATION SOCIETY MORAL DIMENSION OF INFORMATION SYSTEMSMORAL DIMENSION OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS*

14.5 ETHICS PRINCIPLES OF RIGHT AND WRONG USED BY INDIVIDUALS AS FREE MORAL AGENTS TO GUIDE BEHAVIOR *

14.6 INFORMATION RIGHTS & OBLIGATIONSINFORMATION RIGHTS & OBLIGATIONS PROPERTY RIGHTSPROPERTY RIGHTS ACCOUNTABILITY & CONTROLACCOUNTABILITY & CONTROL SYSTEM QUALITYSYSTEM QUALITY QUALITY OF LIFEQUALITY OF LIFE* MORAL DIMENSIONS OF THE INFORMATION AGE

14.7 INDIVIDUAL SOCIETY POLITY ETHICAL ISSUES SOCIAL ISSUES POLITICAL ISSUES QUALITY OF LIFE QUALITY OF LIFE INFORMATION RIGHTS & OBLIGATIONS PROPERTY RIGHTS & OBLIGATIONS ACCOUNTABILITY & CONTROL SYSTEM QUALITY ETHICAL, SOCIAL & POLITICAL ISSUES INFORMATION & TECHNOLOGY

14.8 TECHNOLOGY TRENDS & ETHICAL ISSUES COMPUTING POWER DOUBLES EVERY 18 MONTHSCOMPUTING POWER DOUBLES EVERY 18 MONTHS DECLINING COSTS OF DATA STORAGEDECLINING COSTS OF DATA STORAGE DATA MINING ADVANCESDATA MINING ADVANCES NETWORKING ADVANCESNETWORKING ADVANCES*

14.9 ETHICS IN AN INFORMATION SOCIETY RESPONSIBILITY: Accepting costs, duties, obligations for decisionsRESPONSIBILITY: Accepting costs, duties, obligations for decisions ACCOUNTABILITY: Assessing responsibilities for decisions & actionsACCOUNTABILITY: Assessing responsibilities for decisions & actions LIABILITY: Must pay for legal damagesLIABILITY: Must pay for legal damages DUE PROCESS: Insures laws are applied properlyDUE PROCESS: Insures laws are applied properly*

14.10 ETHICS IN AN INFORMATION SOCIETY ETHICAL ANALYSIS: IDENTIFY, DESCRIBE FACTSIDENTIFY, DESCRIBE FACTS DEFINE CONFLICT, IDENTIFY VALUESDEFINE CONFLICT, IDENTIFY VALUES IDENTIFY STAKEHOLDERSIDENTIFY STAKEHOLDERS IDENTIFY OPTIONSIDENTIFY OPTIONS IDENTIFY POTENTIAL CONSEQUENCESIDENTIFY POTENTIAL CONSEQUENCES*

14.11 ETHICAL PRINCIPLES: TREAT OTHERS AS YOU WANT TO BE TREATEDTREAT OTHERS AS YOU WANT TO BE TREATED IF ACTION NOT RIGHT FOR EVERYONE, NOT RIGHT FOR ANYONE (KANT)IF ACTION NOT RIGHT FOR EVERYONE, NOT RIGHT FOR ANYONE (KANT) IF ACTION NOT REPEATABLE, NOT RIGHT AT ANY TIME (DESCARTES)IF ACTION NOT REPEATABLE, NOT RIGHT AT ANY TIME (DESCARTES) PUT VALUE ON OUTCOMES, UNDERSTAND CONSEQUENCESPUT VALUE ON OUTCOMES, UNDERSTAND CONSEQUENCES INCUR LEAST HARM OR COSTINCUR LEAST HARM OR COST NO FREE LUNCHNO FREE LUNCH* ETHICS IN AN INFORMATION SOCIETY

14.12 INFORMATION RIGHTS PRIVACY: Right to be left alone FAIR INFORMATION PRACTICES (FIP): NO SECRET PERSONAL RECORDSNO SECRET PERSONAL RECORDS INDIVIDUALS CAN ACCESS, AMEND INFORMATION ABOUT THEMINDIVIDUALS CAN ACCESS, AMEND INFORMATION ABOUT THEM USE INFO ONLY WITH PRIOR CONSENTUSE INFO ONLY WITH PRIOR CONSENT MANAGERS ACCOUNTABLE FOR DAMAGE DONE BY SYSTEMSMANAGERS ACCOUNTABLE FOR DAMAGE DONE BY SYSTEMS GOVERNMENTS CAN INTERVENEGOVERNMENTS CAN INTERVENE*

14.13 U.S. FEDERAL PRIVACY LAWS GENERAL FEDERAL PRIVACY LAWS: FREEDOM OF INFORMATION ACT, 1968 PRIVACY ACT OF 1974 ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATIONS PRIVACY ACT OF 1986 COMPUTER MATCHING AND PRIVACY PROTECTION ACT OF 1988 COMPUTER SECURITY ACT OF 1987 FEDERAL INTERNET PRIVACY PROTECTION ACT OF 1997 *

14.14 PRIVACY LAWS AFFECTING PRIVATE INSTITUTIONS: FAIR CREDIT REPORTING ACT, 1970 FAMILY EDUCATION RIGHTS & PRIVACY ACT OF 1978 RIGHT TO FINANCIAL PRIVACY ACT OF 1978 PRIVACY PROTECTION ACT OF 1980 CABLE COMMUNICATIONS POLICY ACT OF 1984 * U.S. FEDERAL PRIVACY LAWS

14.15 MORE PRIVACY LAWS AFFECTING PRIVATE INSTITUTIONS: ELECTRONIC COMMUNICATIONS PRIVACY ACT OF 1986 VIDEO PRIVACY PROTECTION ACT OF 1988 CONSUMER INTERNET PRIVACY PROTECTION ACT OF 1997 COMMUNICATIONS PRIVACY & CONSUMER EMPOWERMENT ACT OF 1997 DATA PRIVACY ACT OF 1997 * U.S. FEDERAL PRIVACY LAWS

14.16 INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY: Intangible creations protected by law TRADE SECRET: Intellectual work or product belonging to business, not in public domain COPYRIGHT: Statutory grant protecting intellectual property from copying by others for 28 years *

14.17 INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY TRADE MARK: Legally registered mark, device, or name to distinguish one’s goods PATENT: Legal document granting owner exclusive monopoly on an invention for 17 years *

14.18 ETHICAL ISSUES: Who is morally responsible for consequences of use? SOCIAL ISSUES: What should society expect and allow? POLITICAL ISSUES: To what extent should government intervene, protect? * ACCOUNTABILITY, LIABILITY & CONTROL

14.19 ETHICAL ISSUES: When is software or service ready for release? SOCIAL ISSUES: Can people trust quality of software, services, data? POLITICAL ISSUES: Should congress or industry develop standards for software, hardware, data quality? * SYSTEM QUALITY: DATA QUALITY & SYSTEM ERRORS

14.20 QUALITY OF LIFE CENTRALIZATION VS. DECENTRALIZATION RAPID CHANGE: Reduced response time to competition MAINTAINING BOUNDARIES: Family, work, leisure DEPENDENCE AND VULNERABILITY COMPUTER CRIME & ABUSE *

14.21 QUALITY OF LIFE EMPLOYMENT: trickle-down technology; reengineering job loss EQUITY & ACCESS: increasing racial & social class cleavages HEALTH RISKS *

14.22 QUALITY OF LIFE HEALTH RISKS: REPETITIVE STRESS INJURY (RSI)REPETITIVE STRESS INJURY (RSI) CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME (CTS)CARPAL TUNNEL SYNDROME (CTS) COMPUTER VISION SYNDROME (CVS)COMPUTER VISION SYNDROME (CVS) TECHNOSTRESS: Irritation, hostility, impatience, enervation, fearTECHNOSTRESS: Irritation, hostility, impatience, enervation, fear VDT RADIATIONVDT RADIATION*

14.23 MANAGEMENT ACTIONS: A CORPORATE CODE OF ETHICS INFORMATION RIGHTS & OBLIGATIONS PROPERTY RIGHTS & OBLIGATIONS ACCOUNTABILITY & CONTROL SYSTEM QUALITY QUALITY OF LIFE *

14.24 Connect to the INTERNET Laudon/Laudon Web site: Additional Internet Resources related to this chapter: gopher://gopher.vortex.com/privacy /nw-02-cookiehowto.html © 2001 Laudon & Laudon, Essentials of Management Information Systems 4/e

14.25 OF INFORMATION SYSTEMS CHAPTER 14. ETHICAL & SOCIAL IMPACT